Theresa May will appeal to Leavers and Remainers to put a stop to their bitter feuding as she lays out her strategy for negotiating Britain's departure from the European Union.

The Prime Minister is expected to give the most detailed insight yet into her approach to the forthcoming talks with Brussels in a major set-piece speech on Tuesday.

Downing Street refused to be drawn on reports that she will set out plans for a "hard Brexit" - pulling of the single market and the European customs union in order to regain control of immigration and end the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.

Although the exact contents of the speech are said to be a closely-guarded secret, The Sunday Telegraph quoted a government source as saying: "She's gone for the full works. People will know when she said 'Brexit means Brexit', she really meant it."

Writing in The Sunday Times, Brexit Secretary David Davis said the Government would be seeking to forge a "strong new partnership" with the remaining 27 member states.

'We need to persuade our allies'

"We don't want the EU to fail, we want it to prosper politically and economically, and we need to persuade our allies that a strong new partnership with the UK will help the EU to do that," he wrote.

He also indicated that the Government would consider some form of transitional arrangement - a move likely to be regarded with suspicion by hardline Brexiteers who have been demanding a clean break.

"It proves necessary we will consider time for implementation of the new arrangements," he said.

Pro-Remain former education secretary Nicky Morgan, who was sacked by Mrs May, said the Prime Minister should put "maximum participation" in the single market at the "heart" of her negotiating strategy and warned her not to damage the economy.

Key moments of Theresa May:

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"The Government will be doing a disservice to the country and to both Leave and Remain voters if it dogmatically pursues a hard, destructive Brexit where immigration control is the be all and end all, our economy is undermined, and people are left poorer," she said.

One of the themes of Mrs May's speech is expected to be the need to foster unity by building "common goals" - such as protecting and enhancing workers' rights - in an attempt to create a consensus after months of acrimonious exchanges.

"One of the reasons that Britain's democracy has been such a success for so many years is that the strength of our identity as one nation, the respect we show to one another as fellow citizens, and the importance we attach to our institutions means that when a vote has been held we all respect the result," she is expected to say.

'We need to end division'

"The victors have the responsibility to act magnanimously. The losers have the responsibility to respect the legitimacy of the result. And the country comes together.

"Now we need to put an end to the division and the language associated with it - Leaver and Remainer and all the accompanying insults - and unite to make a success of Brexit and build a truly global Britain."

Most attention, however, will inevitably be centred on her approach to key issues around the single market, the customs union and free movement of labour.

In their first report, MPs on the cross-party Commons Exiting the EU Committee said she should set out her plans in a Government white paper by mid-February.

That would give MPs a chance to debate the Government's strategy before she invokes Article 50 - signalling the start of the formal two-year negotiating process - which she has said she will do before the end of March.

It is unclear however how much detail the Prime Minister will be prepared to reveal at this stage, having repeatedly stressed that she is not going to undermine her negotiating position by giving away too much too soon.

The speech takes place on Tuesday

Mrs May will deliver her address amid the 19th century splendour of London's Lancaster House - scene of numerous international summits - a venue chosen to emphasise Britain's continuing global leadership.

The audience will comprise both the London diplomatic corps - overseas ambassadors and high commissioners based in the UK - as well as the full UK Brexit negotiating team.

Preparations for the event take place as the EU's chief negotiator offered the first hint of a compromise from Brussels to ensure member states continue to have easy access to the City, it is reported.

Michel Barnier has indicated he wants the remaining 27 to have a "special relationship" with the financial markets of the City of London, according to unpublished minutes seen by The Guardian.